Beyond outputs demonstrating genuine impact - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Beyond outputs demonstrating genuine impact

Description:

... stakeholders (management committee, volunteers, staff, ... Accountancy. Social accounting overview. Social Audit Network. Harris & Harris. Accountancy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:58
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: rege
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Beyond outputs demonstrating genuine impact


1
Beyond outputs - demonstrating genuine impact
  • Heidi Harris

2
About the trainer
  • Volunteer with Bloomsbury Cyber Junction (BCJ)
    bid writing and finances
  • Joint owner of CIC specialising in providing
    accountancy support to charities, voluntary
    community groups, and social enterprises
  • Chartered Accountant
  • Over 10 years experience of working in the
    voluntary and community sector

3
Session Overview
  • Background to BCJ
  • What makes BCJ successful
  • Issues affecting BCJs success
  • Evaluation and impact reporting
  • Overview of Social Accounting (SAN)

4
Background to BCJ
  • BCJ established August 2000 (registered charity)
  • To provide IT activities for young people
  • Resolving a local issue
  • In Nechells ward, Birmingham an area that had
    seen millions of regeneration
  • Residents tired of projects and considered hard
    to reach

5
Background to BCJ
  • How would you involve hard to reach groups in a
    new project?

6
Background to BCJ
  • One person acting as a community leader
  • Pushing for change
  • Gaining trust of other residents door
    knocking/on the street
  • Not being put off by negative comments of
    statutory bodies
  • This was crucial for BCJs initial success
  • Community engagement just happens every day now!

7
Background to BCJ
  • 2002 started working with adults
  • Employed first 3 staff
  • Developed 3 areas of activities
  • 2006 second premises, plus outreach at various
    locations
  • Grown from income of 1,500 to nearly 200,000
  • Problems with gaining funding

8
Why BCJ is successful
  • Run by local residents
  • Strong community involvement
  • All staff professionally qualified
  • Committed volunteers
  • Quality and appropriate procedures

9
Why BCJ continues to be successful
  • Engagement
  • Responsive to changing needs
  • Awards from RegenWM and Enterprising
  • Communities
  • Partnership working
  • Outreach
  • New projects/income generation activities
  • Core values listen to everyone

10
Core values
  • Our services are accessible to all
  • Trust and honesty are used to build positive
    relationships
  • Our services are delivered professionally and to
    a high quality
  • We provide a supportive environment and value
    each individual (you never know who that person
    is the secret millionaire?)
  • We work together in a team to achieve more
  • Do you have a set of core values that underpin
    how you work?
  • Should be reflected in everything your
    organisation does

11
Partnership working
  • The good, the bad and the ugly
  • Bournville Village Trust
  • Employment Preparation Team
  • Community Facilitators Project
  • Realise Project cluster
  • BEST network
  • City Spirit Project
  • Consortia bids
  • What are the key issues with partnerships?

12
Evaluation of BCJ
  • BCJ evaluates every project
  • Gains feedback continually
  • Matrix assessment needed to obtain more formal
    feedback
  • Realise project Social accounting cluster
  • ESF projects required lots of beneficiary
    information and paperwork
  • Recognised change from outputs to outcomes, and
    developed systems

13
Beyond outputs
  • Inputs

Activities
Outputs
Outcomes
Impacts
14
Social Accounting
  • Opportunity to undertake social accounting as
    part of Realise
  • Worked in a cluster with other organisations
  • Training and support from SAN
  • Everyone committed to the process
  • Decided to review our IT training activities only

15
What is social accounting?
  • Social Accounting (and SROI) are tools for
  • Measuring social, environmental and economic
    impacts
  • Reporting on performance
  • Planning and improving how you work
  • Not just for measuring impact but a whole process
    and way of developing your organisation

16
Outcomes to Impacts
  • Impact measurement is not a quick fix
  • Requires an investment of time
  • Requires a commitment to changing how a whole
    organisation thinks and works
  • A development tool not just a one off exercise

17
Getting Ready
  • Clarity regarding
  • Mission (vision/purpose for existing) not about
    education but equality and inclusiveness
  • BCJ first port of call for any resident issues
  • BUT
  • We are clear about what we do and when we need to
    refer elsewhere
  • Values (principles that underpin how BCJ
    operates)
  • Objectives and activities (What BCJ wants to
    achieve and the work it does to achieve this)
  • Stakeholders (individuals/organisation that BCJ
    affect or who can affect BCJ)

18
Next steps
  • Gathered information
  • Consulted key stakeholders (management committee,
    volunteers, staff, partner organisations, funders
    and beneficiaries)
  • Used Annual Award ceremony to undertake
    questionnaires
  • Used existing sources of information feedback
    forms, evaluation forms, follow up forms to
    identify what had happened to each beneficiary
  • Case studies
  • Base line information from registration forms

19
Economic impact
  • Most organisations find it easy to report on
    social impacts
  • Economic and environmental impact information
    usually much harder
  • Social accounting sees SROI as one way of
    measuring economic impact
  • As an accountant the numbers interested me
  • Decided to do SROI for BCJ as part of our Social
    Accounts
  • Translates impacts in to a financial measure

20
Social Return on Investment
  • Proven economic impact to be 3.92m,
  • which is over 20 times the income received in
    2007. This was achieved by
  • Supporting 42 local residents to gain employment
  • Improving 228 local residents soft skills
  • Increasing 134 local residents qualification
    levels
  • Supporting 13 young people to return to education
    or training
  • Using volunteers and employing local people

21
Social Return on Investment
  • Found out how many beneficiaries had gone
    in to employment and the type of employment 42
    ranging from taxi drivers to administrators
  • Calculated average wages for each job
  • Worked out how benefit entitlement would change
    (no longer receive JSA but receive WTC instead)
  • Worked out how much tax and NIC would be paid

22
Social Return on Investment
  • Calculate benefit for each impact
  • Adjusted for deadweight, drop off and attribution
    (40 reduction)
  • Adjusted for inflation and project benefits that
    will accrue over a number of years (ie once
    gained employment we expect that person to stay
    in employment for 5 years)
  • Calculated SROI (net benefit/net investment)
  • Did this for each area of economic impact
    (volunteers, NEET, earnings potential
    (qualifications) and soft skills)

23
Proving and Improving
  • Social Accounting Report
  • Case studies individual impact reports
  • In 2008 used same principles to demonstrate
    impact
  • Predictive impact and SROI for applications

24
Contact Details
  • Heidi Harris
  • heidi_at_harrisaccountancy.co.uk
  • 07530 428738 or 0121 240 8974

25
Social accounting overview
  • Social Audit Network
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com